Jonathan Stevens
University of Central Florida
14 Papers
25 Citations
Jonathan Stevens is an academic researcher from University of Central Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Virtual machine & Scalability. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 14 publications.
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Papers
The Relationship between Presence and Performance in Virtual Simulation Training
Jonathan Stevens,J. Peter Kincaid +1 more
- 23 Mar 2015
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between presence and performance while performing a psychomotor task in a virtual environment and found evidence of a moderate relationship between the degree of presence experienced in the simulation and an individual's performance over three training trials.
Exploring the Impact of Simulator Sickness on the Virtual World Experience
Crystal S. Maraj,Karla Badillo-Urquiola,Sushunova G. Martinez,Jonathan Stevens,Douglas B. Maxwell +4 more
- 01 Jan 2017
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of simulator sickness (SS) on the training effectiveness for Virtual World (VW) technologies are investigated. But, the results reveal that SS interrupts presence during the training which can lead to negative training transfer.
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Vertical scalability benchmarking in three-dimensional virtual world simulation
Sean C. Mondesire,Jonathan Stevens,Douglas B. Maxwell +2 more
- 26 Jul 2015
TL;DR: Measurements of CPU utilization and simulation frames per second are evaluated for their effectiveness in vertical scalability benchmarking by evaluating the effectiveness of commonly used system metrics to measure scalability in a three-dimensional virtual trainer.
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An analysis of increased vertical scaling in three-dimensional virtual world simulation
Sean C. Mondesire,Jonathan Stevens,Douglas B. Maxwell +2 more
- 24 Aug 2015
TL;DR: This work provides an in-depth analysis of a virtual world simulator under different hardware profiles to determine the effect of increased vertical computational scaling.
Make it usable: highlighting the importance of improving the intuitiveness and usability of a computer-based training simulation
Stephen R. Serge,Jonathan Stevens,L. Eifert +2 more
- 06 Dec 2015
TL;DR: A heuristic evaluation was conducted to identify strengths and weaknesses of LG-RAID's User Interface (UI) design, with a focus on the importance of being mindful of the cognitive capabilities of the user when designing UIs, understanding and executing simulation design needs based on these capabilities, and the benefits of integrating those design changes during development.